Showing posts with label puget sound snow. Show all posts
WSDOT helps to get the lights back on
Posted by Unknown in partnerships, puget sound snow, winter, wsdot on Tuesday, January 24, 2012
To make sure the lights and heat come back on as quickly as possible, our Olympia-area maintenance road crews are out with utility crews, working traffic control for Puget Sound Energy and others repairing downed power lines.

So what does a flagger or pilot car have to do with getting the lights on? Holding that stop/slow sign or leading traffic through the same 1/4-mile route over and over may not seem to help get power back on, but it’s those vital tasks that allow utility crews up in that bucket truck get their job done faster and safer, and make sure drivers get around those crews and back home.

WSDOT's Snow Man: In his own words
Posted by Unknown in dennis keeler, puget sound snow, snow plow, snow plow driver, wsdot on Monday, December 29, 2008
When you see clear roads in the mountain passes and on the highways during the holidays, think of Dennis Keeler.
Keeler has worked for the Washington State Department of Transportation for 26 years – most of those plowing a path on I-90 through Snoqualmie Pass.
He and hundreds like him work hard 12-hour shifts in the cold and wind clearing the region's roads for holiday travelers.
More often than not, that includes working a long shift on Christmas.
“It’s something you really don’t want to do, but it’s part of the job,” said Keeler, a maintenance technician. “I figure if I work, maybe everybody else can have Christmas dinner with their kids and their families. I’ve done it for 26 years.
“My kids, my wife, they understand it. They may not like it, but they understand it. It goes with the territory.”
Keeler figures he’s worked on Thanksgiving and Christmas during 20 of his 26 years with the state.
“I love plowing snow. I plowed for 23 years up on Snoqualmie Pass, so I had to like the snow somewhat. I like doing highway maintenance.”
Keeler’s five kids – four sons and one daughter – are grown. Keeler also has five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
“That’s the thing I’m going to miss at Christmas dinner is my great-grandkids, but they’ll ask, and grandma will tell them: Grandpa’s working.”
After nearly two weeks of snow storms in the Puget Sound area, WSDOT’s snow plows are a familiar and often welcome sight.
Keeler said he’s been getting more thumbs up and honks of appreciation than usual.
Even so, we’re all waiting for the winter weather to warm up.
“It gets old, but we keep on pluggin’,” Keeler said.
To see photos of what it's like from the driver's seat of a snowplow, check out our Flickr site.